Don was born on 17th of May 1937
in London. At age sixteen he joined the merchant navy as a steward. Called up for national
service he served nine years in the Royal Green Jackets (army unit). He entered as a
private and left as a private in spite of many offers of promotion. He served in many of
the world's trouble spots including Borneo, British Guyana, and Berlin.
In 1971 he joined me in the row I was planning across
the Atlantic; which we started on the 12th of January in Las Palmas, Grand Canaries and
finished on the 26th of March at Barbados. Fifteen years later Don set out in the same
boat the QE3 from Pasito Blanco, Grand Canaries and rowed in 114 days to Nevis in the West
Indies. He started on the 30th of January and finished on the 23rd of May. He was 49 years
old. The last two weeks of this voyage Don was completely out of water. And when he landed
at Nevis his eyesight and hearing were failing and he had lost half his body weight. It
was as a result of these deprivations that a few years later his kidneys failed several
times and eventually led to the fatal heart attack that killed him.
Apparently recovered from the 1986 voyage Don shipped the QE3 to
St. Johns, Newfoundland for the return voyage that had always been his intention to be the
first man to row the Atlantic in both directions. He started from St John's, Newfoundland
on the 21st of June 1987 and rowed to Dooagh, Ireland on Achill Island county Mayo in 77
days. He was fifty years old. During the voyage he suffered many capsizes and sustained a
severe gash to his head when the compass hit him as the boat went over.
When just eighty miles west of Ireland a fall storm caught up
with him and almost overwhelmed the boat. However (unknown to him) the people of Dooagh
were expecting him and as the QE3 was swept down the coast the villagers used their car
headlights to light the tiny beach as the QE3 was almost shipwrecked. The villagers waded
into the sea and carried Don and the QE3 to safety.Don stayed in Dooagh for some time and
the local people built a large monument in the town to commemorate his voyage. I
believe this was the happiest time of Don's life.
So Don Allum became the first man to row the Atlantic in both
directions and is still the only man to have rowed both ways solo. He is also the only man
to have completed three ocean crossings in a rowboat.
In the last years of his life Don suffered from poor health
and two bouts of kidney failure and chest pains convinced him that he didn't have very
long to live. In spite of my pleading with him he refused to get treatment. He said,
" I have done everything I want to do." Don died on the 2nd of November from a
heart attack at his flat in Heston Middlesex. He was the bravest of us all.
Geoff Allum
ORS Trustee